Oldest Inuit Footage Ever

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  • Опубліковано 5 лют 2025
  • Incredible footage of the Inuit, Yupik and Inupiat tribes. These unique films of life in the Arctic give us a glimpse thousands of years into the past.
    A civilization that not only survives in such an extreme environment, but prospers.
    Millenia distilled into a moment on film. A fleeting glimpse of an ancient world.
    Listen to the soundtrack here: • Top Songs - Inuit Chill
    Chapters:
    Who are the Inuit people?
    How Big Is The North American Arctic?
    Hunting & Food
    Clothing
    How To Make An Igloo
    Dogs
    Columbia Eneutseak
    The Inuit Kiss
    The Oldest Inuit Footage Ever
    Written and edited by
    Al Paton
    Films featured in the video are
    Iglulingmiut Inuit
    Hunters In Transition - Part 1
    Visiting The Eskimos
    Smith Sound Eskimos, 1930s
    King Island Dancers
    Wolf Dance
    Filming glaciers, 1931
    Nalukataq whale feast at Barrow, 1947
    We Live in the Arctic, 1947
    Donald B MacMillan in the Changing Arctic
    St. Lawrence Island Yupik Traditions Sanightaaq
    The Viking 1931
    NASA film on Greenland
    Nanook of the North
    Life on the Border 1911
    Tip top of the Earth
    The Witch of the Everglades
    Eskimos Winter in Western Alaska
    How to Build an Igloo
    Glimpses of Greenland (1924)
    Alaskan Adventures (1926)
    Scientific Expedition Into the Great Arctic
    Alaska's Silver Millions
    Esquimaux Village
    Eskimo Children (1941)
    1925 MacMillan Byrd Expedition
    Esquimaux Leap-frog
    Esquimaux game of snap-the-whip
    Music
    Inuit Chill
    Native American Chillout
    • Top Songs - Inuit Chill
    Music Features Samples from:
    Carlos Carty - FreeSound.org
    Photos:
    Snow Goggles - Jared Zimmerman

КОМЕНТАРІ • 794

  • @annepoitrineau5650
    @annepoitrineau5650 Рік тому +245

    They smile a lot, and they go about things relaxed, unhurried, with great efficiency. I also notice the loving care to their children and their incredible ingenuity. Thank you so much for this film and the wonderful music.

    • @michaelduncan2151
      @michaelduncan2151 Рік тому

      Now you understand THAT we didn't evolve from Neanderthals...made up names ....Created by the Living God....And the Invaluable Knowledge needed to Sustain us throughout the millenniums.....!!!!

    • @gaborbakos7058
      @gaborbakos7058 Рік тому +7

      And those are real smiles and laughs, not posing American fake smiles.

    • @standingbear998
      @standingbear998 Рік тому +4

      you will see that in most so called third world peoples.

    • @edwardmacnab354
      @edwardmacnab354 Місяць тому +1

      everybody smiles a lot when a camera comes out . These guys fought off the Vikings , so , they weren't smiling then .

    • @annepoitrineau5650
      @annepoitrineau5650 Місяць тому

      @@edwardmacnab354 Have you met Inuits? Of course they can be fierce, but they are very good natured and friendly if you meet them and smile very easily. Also, I was very amazed at their gentle ways with their children. There are a lot of other people who were photographed filmed very early in the history of photography, and who do not smile at all. Smiling in front of the camera is a learnt behaviour actually, and all you need to do is look at old photographs and films to find out.

  • @terryrogers7899
    @terryrogers7899 Рік тому +103

    I love those beaming smiles. What a beautiful people.

  • @skh_okakok
    @skh_okakok Місяць тому +48

    We are still here ❤

    • @watkinsinc.7147
      @watkinsinc.7147 14 днів тому +3

      Ilagiit ❤

    • @rebeccaredding5922
      @rebeccaredding5922 13 днів тому +5

      It's incredible how much Inuit culture has been adopted or popularized, such as Eskimo kisses, kayaks, parkas, igloos, husky dogs, and dog sleds. I love that you are still here. Don't forget who you are because you are amazing!

    • @amypetra5021
      @amypetra5021 13 днів тому +1

      @@skh_okakok where are you? Alaska? You seriously look like my little sister.

    • @naturalfreehuman
      @naturalfreehuman 9 днів тому +2

      thank god.

    • @amypetra5021
      @amypetra5021 7 днів тому +1

      @ omg this was so precious of you to send me this high vibration wish, thank you so much 🙏🏼🫶🏼💯🕊️

  • @daveybass655
    @daveybass655 Рік тому +144

    Extremely sophisticated peoples. Living comfortably, in harshest condition, thriving. The kyaks, and clothing ! As well as the child, playing with a sled, and puppy. Awesome.

    • @KatherineUribe-1
      @KatherineUribe-1 Рік тому +12

      Very hard working folk yet very joyful.

    • @teresaoconnell4790
      @teresaoconnell4790 Рік тому +13

      I dont think thats a puppy . I think its a polar bear cub.

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood Рік тому +6

      @@teresaoconnell4790 😅😅😅Puppy. The puppies learn to pull as young as the kids learn to push a sled. It's ok, they both like doing what they're doing.

    • @levequedidier3676
      @levequedidier3676 Рік тому +2

      Comfortably? Not always.

    • @johanna5688
      @johanna5688 11 місяців тому

      Sophisticated? They were wild and primitive. More animal than human.

  • @martinphilip8998
    @martinphilip8998 Місяць тому +51

    My mother lived and taught school in Nome in the forties. When she was 75 she returned to visit and brought with her many photos she had taken of the local Inuit. The was much excitement when she gave this treasure to the local community center. So many people excited to see images of people they had never seen but knew of or people who recognized and knew the people in the pictures.

    • @Nickster621
      @Nickster621 20 днів тому +5

      God bless your mother

    • @johngilmer6782
      @johngilmer6782 19 днів тому +2

      Too cool! Her memories must have been awesome, too.

    • @watkinsinc.7147
      @watkinsinc.7147 13 днів тому +2

      @@martinphilip8998 Have you ever read an old book titled "TISHA"? It's a beautiful story. (Tisha meaning Teacher)
      I read it nearly 30 years ago and will never forget

    • @martinphilip8998
      @martinphilip8998 12 днів тому

      @@watkinsinc.7147 I will look for that book. Northern Passage is a book written about life in Nome at the time my parents met and married there. There is a hilarious part about my father the math teacher, in which the students asked about his new suit. On the chalkboard he wrote “schmaltz” and said the suit was made from very fine fabric of that name. The author got home and mentioned the incident to her mother who was likely the only person in Nome to know some Yiddish. She laughed her head off at my Dad’s joke on them.
      My mother shared many stories. She had a student named Oblogaluk. She mispronounced the child’s name for a year before someone corrected her. She ask the little girl why she didn’t correct her. “I didn’t want to hurt the nice white lady’s feelings.” Too sweet!

  • @FLASH-MATT
    @FLASH-MATT Місяць тому +15

    Incredible footages and pictures 😮 Bring tears 😢 As a canadian, I feel ashamed for what our ancestors did to these great people who always knew better than us how to take care of the environment and how to live in peace.
    Great short documentary 👌
    Respect for all native people, first nations ✌️

  • @JamesHughes-up9zn
    @JamesHughes-up9zn Рік тому +60

    As a youngster I went to school with Inuait kids in northern Alaska. All my world traveling they were always the happiest people I've encountered.

  • @annalefsrud3132
    @annalefsrud3132 Рік тому +49

    We saw parts of this footage in school when I was a child in northern Canada. What stuck the most, was how they could handle that extreme cold, and how gentle they were with their children. There's an old Inuit saying that is something like, "It's easy to be grateful when times are good, it is essential to be grateful when times are hard".

  • @amypetra5021
    @amypetra5021 Рік тому +378

    My spirit is drawn strongly by seeing this. I’m of Inupiaq/Aleut heritage. I grew up in Chicago with no real experience or connection to my native heritage. My mother grew up in Holy Cross, Alaska in a boarding school/orphanage (really a white mans prison) and wasn’t allowed to be Inuit. At all. But, when I see these people, I’m moved deeply by every truth I own in my DNA. I feel it. A painful longing I can’t identify. I feel like I don’t belong anywhere…

    • @eyesf7693
      @eyesf7693 Рік тому +24

      Maybe you could be at the beginning of a new decolonised journey

    • @amypetra5021
      @amypetra5021 Рік тому +43

      @@eyesf7693 not even sure what that means? What I’m saying is my longing is to belong. I feel like this is who I belong to, but it’s gone. I’m 64 now, my mom is 86 and I have no family, no tribe. Anyway, thanks for responding

    • @DS-nv8bi
      @DS-nv8bi Рік тому +14

      @@amypetra5021 i am 66 and have no fam or belonging.

    • @amypetra5021
      @amypetra5021 Рік тому +21

      @@DS-nv8bi I’m sorry 😞. Sad thing feeling alone

    • @leonstenutz6003
      @leonstenutz6003 Рік тому +14

      Bless you all, from Bolivia.

  • @LupitaHenry-k6t
    @LupitaHenry-k6t 4 місяці тому +28

    My dad recalls owning a polar bear when he was young but fish and wildlife took it away. The mother was caught and left two cubs but the village took in the bears one died and the other was sent out when it got to big and started eating the dogs food in the village. My dad still won't eat polar bear meat to this day. Shared story. Strong resilient ancestors.

  • @martindonald7613
    @martindonald7613 Рік тому +175

    My mother in law Una was half Inuit. She grew up on a small Island In far northern Québec, in what today, we would call a fly in community. Unfortunately, like many Indigenous people of that era, she contracted TB. My wife remembers well the dogs, the seal meat and the seral skin clothing. I am so thankful that my kids and I are , even marginally connected to these immensely strong people.

    • @uaebifvideo5472
      @uaebifvideo5472 Рік тому +9

      Must be proud of your ancestors!! 👍🏼

    • @amypetra5021
      @amypetra5021 Рік тому +10

      Yes, for sure. TB was terrible and my mom’s parents caught it. That’s another reason why she went to the boarding school. Her sister remembers some. Idk why, but they alienated my mom. But I do feel things in my spirit. I really admire the Inuit people. They are intelligent, creative, optimistic, artistic and have an inner strength that seems almost never ending. It makes me proud to think that this is in me too, even though its not directly. I grew up in a world apart in Chicago

    • @uaebifvideo5472
      @uaebifvideo5472 Рік тому +2

      @@amypetra5021 👍🏼

    • @victoriabenally8319
      @victoriabenally8319 Рік тому +3

      Very beautiful stories, I am native too, Native American and proud of it. Admired your points on your ancestors, u rooted an thanks for sharing ♡♡

    • @martindonald7613
      @martindonald7613 Рік тому +2

      @@victoriabenally8319 Not my ancestors but my wife's.

  • @tessjones5987
    @tessjones5987 Місяць тому +21

    Smiling people. Artists, Builders, Musical, Athletic, Loyal familles. Fascinating. Thank you for posting.

  • @uriahpierce3602
    @uriahpierce3602 Рік тому +179

    One of the most amazing thing to me is the joy you see in most everyone in this video and many others that I have watched , we call them primitive, not as advanced, but I believe that they have something that we have forgotten!… each other and community, contentment, seems there’s always just enough but plenty to go around.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +24

      Not always. There was a lot of starvation too. Many whole families starved, or even clans, for example when the cariboo didn't come, or went a different way. But I certainly know what you mean.
      They were extremely intelligent, and never wasted a thing. They appreciated everything they did have so very much, especially each other. I've read as much as I can about the Inuit, and have extreme respect for how they survived in such hostile conditions! I'm not Inuit, but if I were I would just be so very proud. Every bit of film I see about them moves me so deeply.

    • @hazelpearson7807
      @hazelpearson7807 Рік тому +13

      I lived in high arctic communities for over ten years, this video shows a life long gone. Life in arctic communities now bears no resemblance at all to this footage which might seem idyllic but certainly was very far from that, it was a harsh existence back then, starvation and the continuous hunt for food was the overriding focus of every day, summer and winter. Now they have houses with all the modern conveniences from microwaves, dishwashers to tv and internet, schools, nursing stations, and stores with every kind of food, clothing and household goods.

    • @JJNoire
      @JJNoire Рік тому +10

      @@cattymajivin Ireland and plenty of European countries starvation was also an issue.

    • @tribequest9
      @tribequest9 Рік тому +14

      amen, we have lost our way, we are not meant to work 8 hours a day 365 days a year and live a mostly sedentary life.

    • @ron1836
      @ron1836 Рік тому +6

      ​@@hazelpearson7807probably why they are all killing themselves. It's like a huge problem with natives in Greenland I know.

  • @leadboots72
    @leadboots72 Рік тому +56

    Living free, pure, and happy. At peace with a wild land. Truly amazing people.

  • @maureendelzer
    @maureendelzer Рік тому +72

    Such a beautiful joyful people! In this film they seem to always be laughing. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @BlazeDuskdreamer
      @BlazeDuskdreamer Рік тому +7

      ikr! They're so happy!

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Рік тому +7

      Which is amazing considering what a harsh environment they existed in.

    • @khillsy4489
      @khillsy4489 Рік тому +1

      And then they were gone

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +11

      @@khillsy4489 They are very much NOT gone. There are a great many of them in Siberia, Alaska, Canada, and Greenland. There are probably millions of Inuit.
      One of their biggest problems now is that they are so often forgotten about in government budgets and programs, and in the minds of the people of their modern countries.
      And living so far north still imposes most of the same burdens, just in different ways. Still nothing grows there, but now the wildlife of all kinds is under threat. The whales they relied on are almost gone. There are quotas on how much they can hunt and fish. Even though all the equipment is better, affording that equipment is almost impossible for them. Jobs are very scarce. And the traditional means of survival are becoming forgotten and lost. That has an enormous impact on their ability to get food and on their culture. But to buy food and other supplies that are shipped north on planes is so expensive. So is electricity and heating. Every single thing has to be flown up, since it's too far and too cold to send much by ship.
      It's bad enough for the Inuit in Canada and Greenland, but I'm sure that for the ones who live in Alaska and Siberia it's even worse, due to the attitudes and lack of understanding of the rest of their country. Lack of education about them obviously makes it even worse.

    • @keithfaulk1354
      @keithfaulk1354 Рік тому

      Hello from Georgia!!❤

  • @sunset3052
    @sunset3052 Рік тому +22

    What I see the most in this 24 min video is their happy faces and big smiles!

    • @wannabe4668
      @wannabe4668 Рік тому +3

      They are laughing at how funny their strange visitors look

    • @Whyusemyname
      @Whyusemyname 7 днів тому +1

      I see this comment over and over again. I wonder if living somewhere where it’s dark for four months straight has something to do with it. You have to have a happy disposition to survive there.

  • @anacarpenter9254
    @anacarpenter9254 Рік тому +45

    Living in New Zealand 🇳🇿 thanks for the opportunity to view an historical culture The Inuit. Instinctive
    lifestyle in order to fulfill survival skills. Healthy looking features. The cinematographer, I doff my hat to.
    Thank you for letting me view this exceptionally breathtaking footage.

  • @zoolkhan
    @zoolkhan Рік тому +23

    The more north you go, the more pure your soul and life becomes.
    greetings from finland :) our saami and canadian innuit would have understood each other well.

  • @WLK857
    @WLK857 Місяць тому +9

    It was a huge privilege for me to see such genuine people and their culture. Thanks for that.

  • @crustycobs2669
    @crustycobs2669 Рік тому +34

    Wish we could all live in a society where people loved and laughed, and were brave and creative
    as these people.

  • @larrymyers6327
    @larrymyers6327 Рік тому +17

    I lived with the Yupik Eskimo in Alakanuk Alaska for 4 years. Loved it.

  • @koriw1701
    @koriw1701 16 днів тому +4

    I'm not sure why, but in all the years I've looked for authentic Inuit films, I keep running into the 'Nanook of the North' type, which is so insulting to these people. I'm gratified to have seen your video and to hear authentic music with it. Thank you.

  • @WellaWally65
    @WellaWally65 16 днів тому +3

    I am so happy to have come across this wonderful video.
    It’s unfortunate that you didn’t explain each segment better, though.
    I fell in love with the Inuit People (and with the beautiful State of Alaska) by watching Ms. Agnes Hailstone from the wonderful Series “Life Below Zero.”
    They, The Hailstones, have kept all these amazing Inuit traditions Alive!
    The Hunting, the Clothes, the Artwork, everything!
    Beautifully passed down to all their children and grandchildren.
    God bless them all!

  • @heyokaempath5802
    @heyokaempath5802 Рік тому +26

    I believe the Inuit are connected to the Ainu people.
    Such a beautiful piece of work, loved every second of it.
    Thank you for putting this up and sharing this with us.

    • @melissapinol7279
      @melissapinol7279 6 місяців тому +1

      Back in the 80's a saw a Russian film about a group of Ainu living on the Sakhalin (sp?) islands between Russia and Japan. They wore fur clothing, lived in communal houses, and used sled dogs! It was really interesting. I can't remember the title, and haven't been able to find it since, sadly.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 4 місяці тому +2

      Nope, they are not related people at all.
      Ainu people had dark skin, very curly and thick hair, lots of thick beard.
      deep set eyes.
      Inuits obviously look Mongolian.

    • @niamtxiv
      @niamtxiv Місяць тому

      No, they are connected to Siberians.

  • @KatherineUribe-1
    @KatherineUribe-1 Рік тому +77

    A beautiful and rich culture. Thank you for sharing this with us.

    • @lamontpearce170
      @lamontpearce170 Рік тому

      😢😢

    • @peaceleader7315
      @peaceleader7315 Рік тому

      Hmmmm... evolution also imposed its will on cultures and religions, language and lifestyle.. hmmmm.. I guess nothing stays the same..😔.

  • @cattymajiv
    @cattymajiv Рік тому +25

    Thanks so much for this lovely view of such beautiful people!

  • @stevenstreets695
    @stevenstreets695 11 днів тому +2

    Watching this outside below freezing. Perfection. Never so happy to be cold

  • @denisehampton3102
    @denisehampton3102 Рік тому +14

    I wonder if this has been shown to the inuit. To see their family members. What a priceless gift!

    • @goshdarnitman
      @goshdarnitman Рік тому +8

      We've seen some, there's still tons of archival things we have to write specifically for, as in must know the title, date and everything before we can even obtain anything.
      We appreciate whatever is obtainable or is shared, we still hear stories from our grandparents and great grandparents what it was like pre-settlement.
      Pure joy everytime

  • @downtoearth5108
    @downtoearth5108 Рік тому +16

    Beautiful video, thank you for sharing. Of all the native peoples throughout the World. Inuit and others living in these extreme environments are the greatest. I am Maori of New Zealand who trace back to Eastern Polynesia travelled to Aotearoa, first traces a thousand years ago. The settlement here into the Arctic Region is more astonishing. It must have been a slow advancement to begin with to understand the environment first. Thank you again for sharing this great video.

    • @keevee09
      @keevee09 Рік тому +2

      I'm curious about the "hongi", the nose-to-nose greeting which looks identical to the Maori form of greeting. It makes sense in such a harsh environment to greet one another in this manner.

    • @paulwalker6045
      @paulwalker6045 4 місяці тому +2

      notice the incredible similiarity between their dancing and the haka

  • @fasx56
    @fasx56 Рік тому +39

    This valuable part of Inuit - Eskimo History that was preserved on film. The oldest video I have seen on You Tube of the Inuit People was filmed in the 1930s I believe by the Canadian Government. The British Fur Trading Companies, called the Hudson Bay Company, were established in Canada in the mid 1700s .They traded with the Indians and even the northern Inuit furs for pots, pans , iron and steel tools , clothing and Guns which made the difficult life of all tribal people much easier. Their survival skills developed over thousands of years were amazing but the Harsh land required it to survive. Not sure but I believe the Eskimos were First to know how to build KAYAKS , a unique canoe for sure.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +1

      They were. The idea would have originated in Siberia, as well as the umiak, a bigger boat, which they would have used in their immigration from Siberia originally.
      The ways in which their lives were improved by metal implements and tools were great. There is no doubt. But the ways that contact with whites hurt them was far greater. They were absolutely devasted. As were every other culture that the whites had any contact with. Treated in an abominable manner, and given terrible diseases that wiped most of them out. Those who remained were treated worse than dogs. 400 years later they are still not treated as equals in many ways.

    • @holyworrier
      @holyworrier Рік тому +5

      The Hudson Bay Company was initiated by two French traders who needed English backing to establish a posts on Hudson Bay. We're talking ca. 1664. The rest is history.

    • @ZeldaZorch205
      @ZeldaZorch205 Рік тому +3

      @@holyworrier Hudson's Bay Co. founded in 1607 through a land grant from the British Crown.

    • @holyworrier
      @holyworrier Рік тому +3

      @@ZeldaZorch205 - Thank you. My mistake. I'm misinformed.

    • @daveshen0880
      @daveshen0880 11 місяців тому +2

      Inuit people. Basically you wrote people people. Because the word inuit means people. Next time just use one single word, inuit. Not Inuit People. Greeting from Greenland.

  • @jakejohnson6120
    @jakejohnson6120 Місяць тому +4

    Absolutely fascinating. They appear to be very happy and family oriented. Lovely.

  • @justicewillprevail1106
    @justicewillprevail1106 Рік тому +33

    They look like the purest kindest happiest people of this world. Not contaminated by civilizations cruelty and greed.

  • @MbashorVery
    @MbashorVery 8 місяців тому +6

    Un très beau voyage dans l'authentique Pays des glaces . J'ai beaucoup aimé a voir leur habilité à se faire une place dans cette immensité . Merci pour ces images venus de si loin

  • @vickiparrish3235
    @vickiparrish3235 Рік тому +14

    Excellent documentary! In the early 2000s, having lived with the Inuit in the Baffin and Victoria Islands, NE Canada, then moving to Alaska, this brought back many fond memories. I never learned to do the kayak Eskimo roll, but I did learn to throat sing. Being born/raised with NA in Oklahoma, I was surprised to see so many similarities of the Inuit/Eskimo and NA ways and even similiar looks.

  • @tomquinn5437
    @tomquinn5437 26 днів тому +3

    Wonderful people with so much talent, love and compassion. Thanks for producing this video and sharing with the rest of the world.

  • @bobostaszewski9031
    @bobostaszewski9031 Рік тому +14

    I Am Of Polish/Lithuanian Descent
    When I Watched This Video I Got Goosebumps
    My Thoughts Went Back To June Of 1962
    One Week Out Of High School I Volunteered For The U.S. Army
    I Met 3 Remarkable Men From The Village Of Savoonga AlASka
    Miklahook, Jackson And My Special Buddy Julius Alowa
    Saturday Night Was Tough
    They Barely Made It Back To The Baracks And crashed On The Letrine Floor
    One By one I Hauled Them Upstairs To Their Bunks
    Miss My Dear Brothers 😢😢😢😢

  • @stacysalinas22
    @stacysalinas22 Рік тому +20

    Thank you for sharing this great footage! Wonderful!

  • @terraflow__bryanburdo4547
    @terraflow__bryanburdo4547 Місяць тому +3

    Such a wonderful compilation!
    I remember the film "Nanook of the North" as a child in the 60s.
    I think that 100 years ago, they had richer lives than most in "civilized " countries.
    Now in my late 60s, I eat a similar ancestral diet of raw meat, fish, eggs and high fat. I am in the best health of my entire life. I can understand their intelligence, resilience and joy, even later in my life, especially when in nature. Even when She is tough.
    The old ways were very good!

  • @charleswebster2550
    @charleswebster2550 Місяць тому +3

    I was about 12 years old when my older brother 14 and his friend took me along to our only movie theatre in town. Saturday matinee was where we could enjoy spending our money for mowing grass, delivering newspapers, shoveling snow and allowance for chores at home. Our 25 cent movie & cartoons, with 5 cent candy bars and popcorn was a great treat.
    One Saturday we watched Nanook of the North. Because we were outside in fields & woods most all the time as kids running wild, we were adventurers. Nanook showed us more and changed my desires to that of outdoors & explori g for my lifetime. I began to read everything I could get my hands on at the library and most was polar exploration, Alaska, Canada and Siberia.
    I have seen many of these bits of film clips before and only wish for the complete films. This is so rushed and clipped,but still glad I saw it. Thank for keeping these memories alive.

  • @BlazeDuskdreamer
    @BlazeDuskdreamer Рік тому +12

    Your channel is the absolute best. It's like time traveling to the past.

  • @smarty5680
    @smarty5680 Рік тому +13

    How cool was that? Such happy people, and so resourceful

  • @robertacress4945
    @robertacress4945 Рік тому +18

    Thankyou for sharing this video.
    I learned a little bit about the Inuit people when I read a book written by Farly Mowet...I believe he spent 3 years in the Artic and tells his story...very interesting.
    About 13 year ago I met a man in Sault St Marie Ont that is from the Belcher Islands, he was born in a igloo and didn't start school till he was 9 years old and he had the opportunity to go to school.
    I was up there for a short visit with him to see his family and experienced the culture.
    Robert Flarety is Isaac's grandfather so that makes him Inuit and Irish.
    Isaac left the Belcher Islands and ended being a aircraft matinence engineer and worked on our Ontario water bombers till he retired.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +4

      Farley Mowatt's book is a classic! Almost all of his books are. I've also read at least 2 other books by white people who lived in igloos, and in the primitive style, with Inuit who were not adapted to the modern ways, in villages and in vast stetches of land where no-one had the modern conveniences, and where there were very few people. It was so fascinating.
      One the authors had a name identical to a movie director of the same era, but I forget what it was. John Hughes? He was the guy who first suggested that they sell their carvings to the Hudson's Bat Company. I think he was was working for the HBC at the time. He also started them on doing the fabulous prints that they became so famous for. I might even still have the book by him. I forgotten that name too. If I find it I will devour it again as fast as I can. I love their culture!
      Apparently his 2 sons were both raised in igloos and tents until school age, and were heartbroken when they were told that they were not Inuit. One became a film maker and made at least a few films about the Inuit. Again, I don't know the names of him or his films.

    • @creeper8647
      @creeper8647 Рік тому +4

      Anything by Farley Mowat would be wonderful.

  • @annepoitrineau5650
    @annepoitrineau5650 Рік тому +5

    I am oerwhelmed by the beauty of it all. Thank you so much!

  • @xmarksthespot5188
    @xmarksthespot5188 Рік тому +12

    All working as a team , happy , healthy and beautiful people !

  • @garychynne1377
    @garychynne1377 Рік тому +8

    i'm 78 and when i was 3-4years old my father was a policeman in labrador. we lived with the eskimos. they dressed me with mukluks. when i was 20 i asked my dad what he thought of them. i always remember my dad saying they were lovely people.

  • @2butnot277
    @2butnot277 Рік тому +12

    Simply wonderful from beginning to end.👏👏👏

  • @alicerose9140
    @alicerose9140 11 днів тому +1

    Beautiful, and thanks to the original film maker. I often re-watch the movie 'Atanarjuarat the fast runner' just to check in and wonder how they're doing 😊

  • @terencegamble4548
    @terencegamble4548 Рік тому +11

    A wonderful film. Thank you.

  • @annbrush2435
    @annbrush2435 Рік тому +6

    Another excellent Yestervid production, beautiful!

  • @tutubi597
    @tutubi597 20 днів тому +1

    I think they hold the patent to the smile. What amazing human beings!

  • @allieeverett9017
    @allieeverett9017 Рік тому +3

    Such happiness and beautiful people in what seems to me a harsh land...but it was their home and they loved it, easy to see. Thank you for this gift.

  • @glambertrussell5098
    @glambertrussell5098 Місяць тому +3

    Thank You VERY MUCH for this beautiful piece of History , I love everything about this masterpiece ♥️

  • @SherryRector
    @SherryRector 11 днів тому +1

    Thank you for I smiled and loved every tiny detail of this video

  • @scottenosh4548
    @scottenosh4548 Рік тому +9

    Fascinating stuff. They seem to smile a lot. This shows me man isn't getting better and happier, but worse and sicker.

    • @daveshen0880
      @daveshen0880 11 місяців тому +2

      And they love to laugh alot.

    • @duxdawg
      @duxdawg Місяць тому

      Darwin got it backwards. Mankind is de-evolving into primordial ooze. We see the evidence every day.

  • @mariaphillips4538
    @mariaphillips4538 Рік тому +4

    Awesome I loved watching these amazing people, literally sparkling with zest and joy and Gods grace in their hearts!

  • @Tailtiu3
    @Tailtiu3 Рік тому +3

    Absolutely beautiful and precious footage of tribal people ,real life &joy not tainted by colonial propaganda,thank you ,Beannachtai agus gra from Ireland

    • @johnbrennan3779
      @johnbrennan3779 Рік тому

      Your own country is about to perish. Adh mor ort

  • @janesmith9024
    @janesmith9024 Рік тому +9

    We learn a lot from how we were and some things never change - we mothers feed and carry our children; we eat meat and fish and move. We love each other.

  • @tedsell1455
    @tedsell1455 Рік тому +13

    What Beautiful and Amazing People. ! God Bless

  • @sophitran
    @sophitran Рік тому +8

    Such a beautiful culture and history to share ! Thank you 🙏🏻 you

  • @CricketGirrl
    @CricketGirrl Рік тому +1

    Absolutely incredible footage! Loved the igloos and how happy people seemed.

  • @alejandrorodrigorodrigo3789
    @alejandrorodrigorodrigo3789 Рік тому +2

    the happiest people who ever live.... beautiful.... masterpiece, unique filming, wonderful,well done

  • @RobertaFierro-mc1ub
    @RobertaFierro-mc1ub 8 днів тому

    Such a Beautiful Documentary with only a few words. The background music is awesome! Thank You!

  • @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve
    @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve Місяць тому +4

    What a beautiful people! The Inuit show us that man has the ability to adapt to any conditions! This is why I’m reassured that we will travel to Mars and beyond and settle other planets and atmospheres, and we will adapt, and most likely have learned from the Inuit people and indigenous peoples before them who collectively advanced civilization just like we will continue to do 🙏 ❤️ if we don’t destroy ourselves first! 😮

  • @davidhaynes3126
    @davidhaynes3126 Рік тому +16

    I’m Canadian and have travelled most of the country with exception of the far north.
    It is a trip I would like to do

    • @anncoffey8375
      @anncoffey8375 Рік тому +2

      My sister-in-law from Vancouver travelled up north 53 years ago and never returned to life down here. She married an Eskimo and had half a dozen lovely children. They don't like it down here either. The car culture makes it too noisy and too stinky for them.

    • @davidhaynes3126
      @davidhaynes3126 Рік тому +1

      @@anncoffey8375 cool thanks for telling me

    • @davidhaynes3126
      @davidhaynes3126 Рік тому +1

      @@anncoffey8375 I think cities and city life is dangerous to life in general.
      To Spirit Life, Human Life, Animal Life. It sucks out my soul.

    • @anncoffey8375
      @anncoffey8375 Рік тому

      @@davidhaynes3126 Totally agree. There is nothing life-enhancing about living in a city. Constant noise, no stillness. Traffic-jammed streets filling the air with hazardous substances from vehicle exhausts and wearing-down tyres. People shopping until they drop for things they don't need. Photochemical smog and road salt killing the few remaining trees. And urban planners planning for more ugliness because they plan for cars and not for people, and not planning for people means that they are not planning for nature. Cities are generally soul-destroying environments and the sprawl belts ringing them are even worse than the older city centres. James Kunstler calls the sprawling suburbs "the greatest misallocation of resources in the whole of human history". He is right. They are but temporary rubbish made of glue and woodchips coated with plastic siding and roofed with petrochemical products.

  • @DinoHorvat-j5h
    @DinoHorvat-j5h 2 дні тому +1

    BEAUTIFUL video - Inhabitons from NORD ,font worry about- nothings ,GOD BLESS

  • @goshdarnitman
    @goshdarnitman Рік тому +6

    In Nunavut they call tents tupiq (singular) tupiit (plural) and also lived in rock and sod houses in summer called qammaq (singular) qammait (plural).
    I must say, i appreciate reading everyones curiosity and admiration for my people and my cousins. Beautiful video and comment section ❤

  • @rancidpitts8243
    @rancidpitts8243 Рік тому +14

    Always interested in who we are, who our cousin are. How we live, and lived. We are humanity no matter where we live, or look like.

  • @MichaelHutchings607885
    @MichaelHutchings607885 Рік тому +2

    Absolutely awesome that this popped up in my feed. Just a great video, thanks for sharing.. 👏👏🥴

  • @jennifersinclair5988
    @jennifersinclair5988 Рік тому +2

    Thank you, what a smile this brought to my face and happiness to my heart.

  • @maryland9987
    @maryland9987 Рік тому +10

    They were happy because they had no idle time. Every minute to large act and event in their lives had purpose. They took nothing for granted; not even a stick or rock. Everything, like them, had a use and a purpose. They literally made their lives matter, and utilized anything possible to do that. There was beauty in all they did, and beauty and love surrounded them. What a beautiful life….

  • @FreeCaledonia
    @FreeCaledonia Рік тому +10

    Such clever people. How many city dwellers could do so much with so little. We could learn much from them, but we don't... cos we're so 'superior'. I'm humbled.

  • @smileyzed3843
    @smileyzed3843 Рік тому +7

    brilliant footage thanku

  • @terrymckenzie8786
    @terrymckenzie8786 Рік тому +1

    You can drive now up to the Arctic to Tuktoyucktuk. Amazing drive and amazing people you meet living there.

  • @walterkersting9922
    @walterkersting9922 Рік тому +6

    Imagine the quietude, the silence and the stars.

    • @sophitran
      @sophitran Рік тому

      Thank you I learned a new word ! Quietude 🙏🏻

  • @LAYERSOFLIFE
    @LAYERSOFLIFE Місяць тому +2

    This is such a treasure, thank you for sharing x

  • @hobesoundfalcon2344
    @hobesoundfalcon2344 Рік тому +5

    Having been in Alaska for the 1964 Great Quake, Mount Mackinley is still Mount Mackinley, and they are still Eskamos

  • @robingaura2922
    @robingaura2922 Місяць тому

    Thank you for that lovely compilation! My uncle spent time in the Arctic after WW2, setting up radar stations. He said if he drank a half cup of blubber in the morning, he could go out in shirt sleeves! Amazing how people adapt, and can live in almost any conditions!

  • @stevehurren4864
    @stevehurren4864 Рік тому +3

    Such an amazing full of love insight into true happiness and contentment Thank You.

  • @tsclly2377
    @tsclly2377 Рік тому +6

    I saw this in 1969 as an introduction to Northern North American Culture... These films where available in 16mm film.

  • @jadpatrick7494
    @jadpatrick7494 Рік тому +1

    so playful. And ingenious. This brought me joy. We give ourselves a hard time but humans are pretty amazing.

  • @brucefranklin1317
    @brucefranklin1317 10 місяців тому +2

    This was heavy stuff music was great what a beautiful humble people living in that cold windy place... but they had each other

  • @athensmajnoo3661
    @athensmajnoo3661 Рік тому +3

    Thank you so much for taking us through time machine to experience the life of Inuit people 😊😊
    It is absolutely fascinating 👍👍

  • @lisabarnes6919
    @lisabarnes6919 Рік тому +2

    Wow thank you for sharing so cool! They are beautiful people 🥰

  • @ANAHATAJADE
    @ANAHATAJADE Рік тому +4

    This was very interesting. I hope that thee is more information pertaining to their history. So much we can learn from and understand and cherish.

  • @ziggystardust1751
    @ziggystardust1751 Місяць тому +1

    Thanks for this exciting and comforting video.God bless.

  • @hazelpearson7807
    @hazelpearson7807 Рік тому +10

    This footage was decades ago. The arctic life of the 21st century is very different, the weather has changed only the scenery is the same. Progress and changes just like everywhere else in remote places.

    • @arthurmcbride1235
      @arthurmcbride1235 Рік тому +1

      We know. It's in the title.

    • @hazelpearson7807
      @hazelpearson7807 Рік тому +1

      @@arthurmcbride1235 you might want to read the comments there are those that haven’t read with understanding the title. I lived in the high arctic in the 70’s even then it wasn’t like this vintage video.

    • @arthurmcbride1235
      @arthurmcbride1235 Рік тому +2

      @@hazelpearson7807 Sorry I only read your comment. I didnt know you were talking to other people.

    • @Fairyviewroad
      @Fairyviewroad Рік тому +3

      (Oldest Inuit Footage Ever) it says.

    • @wannabe4668
      @wannabe4668 Рік тому

      Yes, today they use four wheelers, snowmobiles and motor boats as well as modern firearms. And they bathe their children instead of licking them clean.

  • @marushka123
    @marushka123 Рік тому +15

    This is how I would’ve loved to live.
    Wonderful sense of community

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +1

      Their sense of community was indeed wonderful, and mostly still is, and they are wonderfully cheerful and creative people, but it was also extremely hard, living in depressing conditions of constant darkness and extreme cold.
      The men had to go out in those conditions to hunt, and froze their butts doing it, even in the genius designed clothing. The women were stuck inside forever, in a tiny, dirty, hut or igloo sewing and caring for kids.
      They had to eat raw meat almost all the time. They couldn't often chose who or when to marry, and all had to live together, literally sitting and sleeping on top of each other, no matter whether they liked each other or not. They could almost never bathe.
      They did the best that anyone could have in terrible circumstances, and they had a great attitude about it! Until the whites arrived and began a long, long period of cultural genocide against them. Since that occurred, the rates of alcoholism and suicide are astoudingly high! So you would not enjoy it.

    • @politicallyincorrectandpro5856
      @politicallyincorrectandpro5856 Рік тому

      What are you waiting for going there ?🤪

    • @kalevala29
      @kalevala29 Рік тому

      I think they would look at you like you're crazy.

    • @wannabe4668
      @wannabe4668 Рік тому +2

      Not me, I like toothpaste

    • @kalevala29
      @kalevala29 Рік тому +2

      @@wannabe4668 It's the wind for me. I think I would lose my mind. I have friends in Finland, and their winters are pretty brutal and long could possibly live there, but it's still too cold. But they have what's called sisu. I'm sure the Inuit have a similar word/concept. Stoic determination, tenacity of purpose, grit, bravery, resilience, but it doesn't translate into English.

  • @juliebates5315
    @juliebates5315 Рік тому +2

    Such interesting old footage!! ❤🦘

  • @direbearcoat7551
    @direbearcoat7551 Рік тому +1

    FANTASTIC!!!!!
    Thank you for this!

  • @DanishGSM
    @DanishGSM Рік тому +5

    So amazing.
    Thanks so so much.

  • @Celeste-in-Oz
    @Celeste-in-Oz Рік тому +4

    Look how happy they are! Here we are surrounded by comfort and convenience… yet most of us are some combination of depressed, anxious, isolated, fed up, cynical and sick. Humanity took a wrong turn somewhere.

  • @georgetteconstant9050
    @georgetteconstant9050 Місяць тому

    Beautiful. Moving .Thank you for posting this.

  • @clarelynch5860
    @clarelynch5860 Місяць тому

    Excellent video, I enjoyed it very much. What a fabulous people.❤

  • @kristannestone1748
    @kristannestone1748 Рік тому +7

    Are people of this culture really this happy? I hope so!! They're so beautiful.

    • @daveshen0880
      @daveshen0880 Рік тому +1

      The arctic life is hard. In 1827, a danish soldier described cannibalism in east Greenland. Were young hunters killed elders inuit.

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Рік тому +2

      @@daveshen0880 : Really? I’ve never heard of cannibalism in that culture before. Given the abundance of wild game such as caribou I’m surprised they would kill and eat one of their elders.

    • @balikris
      @balikris Рік тому +3

      @@djquinn11 first: there are no caribous in Eastern Greenland. If hunting failed for a longer time the old people might kill themselves by jumping from cliffs or walking out on the ice - so there at least was a little more food for the young people and children. Life was not always just smiles ...

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +1

      @@daveshen0880 A Danish soldier in 1827? That's a lie that could be debunked on just that info alone. You should be ashamed of yourself. Tell us what exactly what your source is. Who wrote that? Where did they write it and when?
      There has been discussion in some of the the books and journals of whether or not it occurred because it's well known that bad migration patterns and unusually long and cold winters did cause starvation and death. But there has never been any proof it happened.
      There is tons of proof of starvation, but none of cannibalism. It was against their religion. Spirits were a huge part of their world, and they thought they would suffer eternal torment by spirits if they did such a thing.
      There have been hundreds of claims made by white men that cannibalism occurred world wide. 99% of them are false. One guy lies or misinterprets something and that gets passed down the line, and changed by almost every person who tells it. Even if you believe it, it's still not likely to have happened.
      In the "Age Of Exploration" the word cannibal was used as a synonym for "savage." Both were untrue when applied to any aboriginal culture. But that's why practically all of those ancient cultures were deemed to be cannibals, and some ignorant people are still very quick to use that word for people they don't understand.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +1

      @@djquinn11 He's either lying himself or passing on a lie, both very mean and irresponsible. The Inuit "religion" forbade it. They were ruled by taboos, so they would suffer torment by spirits for doing it. I'm not officially an expert, but I have read a lot about them, including discussions of how they handled the not infrequent starvation, which was their greatest fear. There has never been proof of any cannibalism.
      I suppose there could have been isolated cases during extreme weather patterns or failures of migrations of birds, seals, whales, etc when they were really starving. Despite the taboos, there probably were people who were more interested in living than conforming to those taboos. And we don't know if killing an elder to eat them would have been seen by them as being the same as eating a person who had died naturally by starving. But we do know that so far there is no proof it occurred. No bones have ever been found with the distinctive cut marks. That guy just made it up, or is spreading someone else's lies.

  • @ithacacomments4811
    @ithacacomments4811 Рік тому +3

    I visited the Inuit Art Museum in Toronto. Unbelievable!

  • @jessicavandyke1449
    @jessicavandyke1449 Місяць тому

    Beautiful upload! Thanks for sharing!

  • @reggierico
    @reggierico Рік тому

    An amazing archive of precious footage of a people we are so unfamiliar with. They had to be smart and ingenious or they would starve and die from the elements. I am proud to occupy the same hemisphere as these wondrous folk.

  • @philippeforest8502
    @philippeforest8502 Місяць тому

    Quality time travelling ! Merci beaucoup du Québec pour ce documentaire !

  • @terencejamesmusic4126
    @terencejamesmusic4126 Рік тому +1

    Beautiful footage.Thanks

  • @toko631
    @toko631 Рік тому +1

    This was an amazing experience to watch truly blessed to see thank you 🙏